810 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
84. Avena fatua, L. Wild Oat. 
Occasional; in fields, roadsides and waste places. 
85. Arrlienatlierum avenaceum, Beany. Oat Grass. 
Bare; occasionally persisting in fields. 
86. Danthonia spieata, Beauv. Wild-oat Grass. 
Common; dry woods. 
87. Spartina cynosuroides, Willd. Cord Grass. 
Common; swamps and stream borders. 
88. Boutelona raeemosa, Lag. 
Bare; dry gravelly bills, Burlington, Bacine Co. Hot 
seen elsewhere. 
89. Phragmites communis, L. Beed. 
Frequent; swamps and lake borders. 
90. Eragrostis Pnrshii, Scbrad. 
Frequent; along railroad tracks, roadsides and other 
dry situations. An introduced grass becoming common 
in the southern third of the State. Hot reported in 
Swezey’s list. 
91. Eragrostis major, Host. 
Common; waste and cultivated ground. A hand¬ 
some species. 
92. Eatonia Pennsylvania, Gray. 
Occasional; low, sandy woods. 
93. Koeleria cristata, Pers. 
Frequent; prairies. 
94. Dactylis glomerata, L. Orchard Grass. 
Common; roadsides, fields, and even thriving in sand 
of Lake Michigan beach. 
95. Poa annua, L. Low Spear Grass. 
Common; waste and cultivated ground. 
96. Poa compressa, L. Wire Grass; English Blue Grass. 
Common; fields, waste places, thickets—in various 
soils. 
97. Poa pratensis, L. June Grass; Kentucky Blue Grass. 
Common; fields, meadows, woods, and even in wet 
sand on beach of Lake Michigan, but a few feet from 
the water’s edge. 
